Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
In composing music for Minecraft, she felt "immense pressure" to deliver due to the "very highly acclaimed score" already in the game. [7] After submitting a demo, her goal with the "Nether Update" soundtrack was to see how far she "could push the sound of the piano until it resembled other things entirely."
Đờn ca tài tử Orchestra in Saigon, 1911. Đờn ca tài tử (Chữ Hán: 彈 歌 才子) or nhạc tài tử (樂才子) is a genre of chamber music in the traditional music of southern Vietnam.
The instrument has twenty-three 800 mm (31 in)-long wire strings attached to a bamboo tube with a metal hose-clamp around the top rim. A 4 litres (0.88 imp gal; 1.1 US gal), rectangular olive oil tin, which acts as a resonator, is clamped to the base of the tube. The instrument is capable of playing both Vietnamese and Western music.
Rosenfeld was born in East Germany in 1989. [7] [8] His father was a goldsmith, and his family had a musical background before they pursued other careers. [9]He learned to create music on early versions of Schism Tracker (a popular clone of Impulse Tracker) and Ableton Live in the early 2000s, both rudimentary tools at the time. [10]
The Piano Sonata in E minor, Hob. XVI/34, L. 53, was written in the late 1770s [ 1 ] by Joseph Haydn and published in London around 1783 by Beardmore & Birchall. [ 2 ]
A maxi-CD, released in Europe and Australia, includes all five songs. [16] In Japan, this maxi-CD was released on 9 January 2002. [17] [18] Following on from the "Mr. Writer" critical backlash, the song received a negative review from Drowned in Sound reviewer Anita Bhagwandas. [19]
[1] Common legends or misconceptions are that the name came about because its chord progression was B–A–D–G–E (which is not true) or simply because the notation of a guitar's standard tuning (E–A–D–G–B–E) can be arranged to spell "Badge". [8]
(1930), the song became a signature tune for Eddie Cantor who sang it in the movie. [1] [2] A stylized version of the song by American singer and songwriter Nina Simone, [2] recorded in 1957, was a top 10 hit in the United Kingdom after it was used in a 1987 perfume commercial and resulted in a renaissance for Simone. [3]